Say ‘Ahhh': A Simpler Way To Detect Parkinson’s

There’s currently no cure for Parkinson’s, a deliberating neurological disease. There’s also no blood test that can detect it, meaning early intervention is almost impossible.

But soon there might be a shockingly easy way to screen for Parkinson’s disease. It would be as simple as picking up the telephone and saying “ahhh.”

“There’s some evidence, admittedly weak, that voice disturbances may well be one of the first or early indicator of the disease,” mathematician Max Little tells weekends on All Things Considered host Guy Raz.

Little is head of the Parkinson’s Voice Initiative and he’s created an algorithm that can determine whether or not a person has Parkinson’s just by the sound of their voice.

Right now, the algorithm has a 99 percent success rate.

A Surprising Result

Little worked on this algorithm while he was getting his PhD at Oxford. It didn’t occur to him that it could be used to detect Parkinson’s disease until a chance encounter with a researcher from Intel.

“He came up to me and said, ‘Max, we’ve got vast amounts of data recorded from Parkinson’s disease patients and we really don’t know what to do with it. So perhaps your algorithms might be useful for analyzing this,'” Little remembers.

The recordings were voices of people both with and without Parkinson’s and Little’s algorithm sorted them. It was 86 percent accurate.

Now, he’s looking to crowdsource more voice recordings of people with and without Parkinson’s to make the algorithm even more accurate.

Last month, Little and his team asked people all over the world to call up their phone banks and record their voices. The caller follows a series of prompts — asking them to say “ahh” for as long as they can and say a few sentences.

“We expected to it to run for six months and collect 10,000 voice recordings over that period,” Little says. “In just under a month, we got 5,000 voice recordings.”

The algorithm listens for three main clusters of symptoms in the voice: vocal fold tremors, breathiness and weakness, and the way the jaw, tongue and lips fluctuate during speech.

Little hopes the algorithm will improve enough so that eventually a person could get a diagnosis and track their illness through the phone.

He admits it’s still in the early stages, but it could be the simplest way to diagnosis Parkinson’s — and a way to help patients get earlier treatment.

“It’s a very tantalizing possibility. If voice is one of the early indicators of the disease, then we have a very cheap way for looking for those who are susceptible in the population,” Little says.